West Sussex residents produce more than 400kg of waste each in a year
The figures come from the Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
Residents in West Sussex produce more than 400kg of waste each in a year, figures reveal.
Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs data shows that West Sussex County Council disposed of 435 kg of household waste per person from homes in the area in 2019-20 – though that was 49.7 kg less than five years earlier.
The amount of waste produced by each resident last year is heavier than four washing machines.
Environmental charity Keep Britain Tidy said there is an "urgent need" to completely overhaul how waste collection and disposal is approached, with more responsibility on producers to reduce packaging.
Of the waste collected from homes in West Sussex, 53.1% was sent for reuse, recycling or composting – five years ago the rate was 41.6%.
This is above the rate for the South East, where 47.6% of household waste was sent for recycling or reuse in 2019-20.
Allison Ogden-Newton, chief executive officer at Keep Britain Tidy, said: “Recycling rates have stalled for a decade.
"The hope is that the Environment Bill will see the crucial measures outlined in the government’s Resources and Waste Strategy actually come about.
"These include Extended Producer Responsibility, a Deposit Return Scheme for drinks containers and consistent recycling collections, including food waste, which if they happen will make all the difference and get us where we need to be in terms of our current goals.
"If, through introducing these measures, we can dramatically reduce the amount of packaging reaching the market, ensure that refillable options are incentivised and insist all single-use packaging is 100% closed loop recyclable consistently across the national, then, and only then, we will hit our goals and fix a system that is currently going nowhere."
She added that with a third of food produced being wasted, there was also an urgent need to reduce this type of waste.
"Ensuring young people learn to cook and value food is one aspect of the solution.
"In addition, we need to see an end to in-store promotions that encourage us to buy more than we need,” she added.
Residents across the South East produced 415.8 kg of household waste per person in 2019-20 – 19.2 kg less than in West Sussex.
Across England, 407.3 kg of rubbish per person were collected from homes in the year to March, a decrease from last year's figure of 409.3 kg.
Councillor David Renard, environment spokesman for the Local Government Association, said: "We are very pleased that the management of household waste continues to head in the right direction, with kilograms of waste per person reducing.
"Now that local authorities have helped the nation get into a good position, we look forward to the introduction of extended producer responsibility and deposit return schemes so that the producers of packaging and drinks containers can start to cover the costs."